Filed 4/3/14 P. v. L’ilith CA3
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
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or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
(Sacramento)
----
THE PEOPLE,
Plaintiff and Respondent, C072155
v. (Super. Ct. No. 12F00070)
MARK L'ILITH,
Defendant and Appellant.
A jury convicted defendant Mark L’Ilith on six counts of committing lewd and
lascivious acts with a 14-year-old boy, in which the defendant was at least 10 years older
than the victim. The trial court sentenced defendant to six years four months in prison.
On appeal, defendant contends the trial court abused its discretion in admitting
evidence of some sexually explicit e-mails authored by defendant, and in excluding other
e-mails from defendant that would have clarified that he liked sex with “barely legal”
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boys, not minors. He also contends he received ineffective assistance of counsel and that
the trial court abused its discretion in imposing the upper term on the count one
conviction.
We conclude there was no error or abuse of discretion and no ineffective
assistance. We will affirm the judgment.
BACKGROUND
In October 2011, defendant met a 14-year-old boy in the men’s bathroom of the
Sacramento Public Library, Carmichael, and engaged in sexual conduct with him in the
bathroom’s accessible stall. The two met again in the same stall on two later occasions
and, each time, defendant ejaculated into the boy’s mouth. On one occasion, the boy
testified that defendant said, “[D]addy like it,” and “suck [my] dick again.”
The boy later exchanged notes with a friend describing the sexual encounters and
mentioning that the man was 43 years old. A friend of the boy’s mother found the notes.
The boy later described the incidents to a detective but said he did not want to get
defendant into trouble. The boy said he told defendant his age and defendant found the
30-year age difference “cool.” The boy also said he hoped to meet the defendant again
for further sexual contact. He testified that he did not think what happened was wrong
and would not have reported it if his notes had not been found.
Police eventually identified defendant from an independent investigation at the
library and from an e-mail address he had written on a slip of paper and given to the boy.
In response to a warrant, police obtained over 3800 e-mails associated with the e-mail
address. A handful of those authored by defendant were redacted and admitted into
evidence.
The admitted e-mails were dated within a few weeks of the date defendant met the
boy at the library. Several were written from a public computer at the library and
pertained to arrangements for sexual liaisons in the library bathroom, while others
expressed defendant’s interest in “father/son incest” and no-condom (“bareback”) sex
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with young men or boys, “the younger the better.” E-mail attachments included nude
photographs of defendant with an erect penis and a piercing on his scrotum matching the
victim’s description.
The trial court denied defendant’s request to admit earlier e-mails in an effort to
clarify that he liked to have sex with “barely legal” boys, not minors.
An amended information charged defendant with eight counts of violating Penal
Code section 288, subdivision (c)(1), lewd or lascivious acts with a child 14 or 15 years
old, with the perpetrator being at least 10 years older than the victim. Four of those
counts (counts one, two, four, and five) alleged separate instances of oral copulation;
three of the counts (counts three, six and seven) alleged that defendant placed his finger
on or in the victim’s anus; and one of the counts (count eight) alleged that defendant
kissed the victim.
The jury convicted defendant on counts one, two, three, four, five and eight. The
jury could not reach a verdict on counts six and seven and those counts were dismissed.
The trial court sentenced defendant to the upper term of three years in prison on
count one, plus a consecutive eight months each on counts two, three, four, five and
eight, for an aggregate term of six years four months in prison.
DISCUSSION
I
Defendant contends the trial court abused its discretion and violated due process
by admitting “marginally relevant, inflammatory” e-mails “referencing ‘disgusting’
sexual facts.” Defendant does not deny that he wrote the e-mails or that he attached the
photograph of himself. He even acknowledges that the e-mails were probative of a
pattern of sex in the accessible stall at the Carmichael library. He contends, however,
that references to sex with “young” or “younger” boys impermissibly suggested unlawful
conduct with minors when, in fact, those terms “likely” referred to young men, not
minors. The undue prejudice of the evidence, he contends, was that the messages
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“evoked an emotional bias” against defendant “by painting him as a sex-craved
disgusting deviant.”
A trial court has discretion to exclude evidence if the probative value of the
evidence is substantially outweighed by the probability that admitting the evidence will
create a substantial danger of undue prejudice. (Evid. Code, § 352.)1 Undue prejudice is
demonstrated when evidence “ ‘tends to evoke an emotional bias against a party as an
individual, while having only slight probative value with regard to the issues.’ ”
(People v. Samuels (2005) 36 Cal.4th 96, 124, quoting, in part, People v. Crittenden
(1994) 9 Cal.4th 83, 134.) A trial court abuses its discretion when its evidentiary ruling
falls outside the bounds of reason. (People v. Hollie (2010) 180 Cal.App.4th 1262,
1274.) On appeal, we review the record to assure that the trial court engaged in the
appropriate weighing process. (Id. at p. 1275.) In this case, it did.
The trial court admitted one e-mail, dated October 7, 2011, which said: “u look
like fun and i will be glad to send pics when u reply[.] [I]n the meantime my [name] is
mark beast[.] [S]ome o[f] my interests are father/son incest and sons who fart while
daddy is fucking them.” The trial court ruled that this e-mail and others saying “things
like, quote, daddy likes it and, quote, suck daddy’s dick” and “ ‘the younger the better’ ”
were admissible because they were “relevant to ID, motive, as well as circumstantial
evidence corroborating what the victim said.”
The trial court considered defendant’s objections but concluded that the probative
value of the evidence was high because the defense claimed the victim fabricated his
story. Nonetheless, the trial court ordered redaction and excluded other writings authored
by defendant.
1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Evidence Code.
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Addressing defendant’s objection that there was no evidence the e-mail
solicitations were addressed to underage boys, the trial court found the e-mails were
nonetheless more probative than prejudicial. The trial court said defense counsel could
argue to the jury that “young” in the e-mails did not mean “underage.” Defense counsel
did so, arguing that defendant was the “victim . . . of some outrageous lies” and
emphasizing that none of the e-mails mentioned ages under 18 and no one could even get
into the website from which the e-mails were generated without affirming that the person
was over 18.
Defendant did not object to admission of the nude photograph of himself. Sending
the photograph and e-mails did “paint[]” him in an unfavorable light, but the trial court
limited undue prejudice by admitting only the statements that tended to rule out the
possibility of mistaken identity, which was the key issue at trial. The trial court did not
abuse its discretion in admitting the e-mails, and the admission of the e-mails did not
render the trial fundamentally unfair.
II
Defendant next contends two of the e-mails he authored were improperly excluded
from evidence. Defendant sought admission of an e-mail dated March 3, 2011, which
said: “I hope you’re for real. I’ve been waiting to start a porn company, nothing but
conversion movies, boys barely legal getting pumped full of AIDS by men at least 20
years older.” He also sought admission of another e-mail dated March 12, 2011, in which
he responded to a question about the youngest boy he had “bred” by saying: “Eighteen,
of course. Younger than that would be illegal.” Defense counsel asked that the
references to conversion movies and AIDS be redacted, but that the jury see defendant’s
other statements because they showed his interest in young boys of legal age.
The trial court denied defendant’s request to admit the proffered e-mails because
they were hearsay. The trial court added: “And I don’t believe they would be admitted
under [section] 356.”
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Defendant argues the trial court erred in ruling that the e-mails were not
admissible under section 356. That section provides that “if part of an act, conversation,
declaration, or writing is placed in evidence, the adverse party may inquire into ‘the
whole on the same subject.’ ” (People v. Arias (1996) 13 Cal.4th 92, 156, original
italics.) The purpose of the section is to prevent a misleading impression caused by
presenting selective portions of evidence without the entire context. (Id. at p. 156.) As
defendant notes, it has been called an “elementary” rule of criminal law that when a
defendant’s admissions are permitted to go to the jury, the entire statement must be
included, provided it is “ ‘ “relevant to, and [was] made on the same occasion as the
statements introduced by, the prosecution.” ’ ” (People v. Stallworth (2008)
164 Cal.App.4th 1079, 1098.)
Here, however, the trial court determined that the proffered e-mails were created
many months before any of the admitted e-mails, were not part of any conversation
identified in the admitted e-mails, and did not provide context or meaning for the
admitted e-mails. The trial court applied the correct legal standards and did not abuse its
discretion in ruling that section 356 did not apply. (See People v. Waidla (2000)
22 Cal.4th 690, 725 [abuse of discretion standard applies to admission of evidence].)
Defendant further argues that the excluded evidence was not hearsay and, in any
event, was admissible under section 1250 as a statement of his then existing state
of mind. He admits, however, that his trial counsel did not argue in the trial court that the
e-mails were not hearsay or that they were admissible under section 1250. Nonetheless,
defendant claims his arguments are not forfeited because it would have been futile to
assert them in the trial court, given the trial court’s determinations regarding the
proffered e-mails. He also argues his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to argue that
the e-mails were not hearsay or that they were admissible under section 1250.
Assuming defendant’s arguments are not forfeited because it would have been
futile to assert them in the trial court, then defendant’s trial counsel was not deficient for
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failing to assert the arguments and defendant’s claim of ineffective assistance lacks merit.
Moreover, even if the proffered e-mails were not offered for the truth of the matter
asserted, the trial court did not err in excluding them; they were not probative of
defendant’s state of mind at the time he met the victim. This conclusion also defeats
defendant’s section 1250 argument. As we have explained, the trial court determined that
the proffered e-mails were created many months earlier and did not provide “context”
under section 1250.
Defendant next argues that the admission of some e-mails and the exclusion of
others deprived him of his constitutional right to present a defense. As a general matter, a
defendant’s constitutional right to present a defense is not abridged by application of the
ordinary rules of evidence. (People v. Boyette (2002) 29 Cal.4th 381, 427-428.) And in
this case, the trial court allowed defendant to explore on cross-examination, and to argue
in closing, that the e-mails were all generated from a website for persons over 18.
Defendant was not denied his right to present a defense.
III
Defendant also claims he was denied effective assistance of counsel because his
trial attorney failed to seek admission of certain evidence pertaining to the victim’s
credibility.
The victim exchanged notes with a friend describing the sexual encounters with
defendant. A friend of the victim’s mother found the notes. Defense counsel questioned
the woman who found the notes, asking why she did not call the police after discovering
them. Trial counsel asked: “Did you believe it was not your place to do that?” The
witness replied, “No. There have been notes written before that weren’t true, so --” At
that point the prosecutor objected and moved to strike the response, and the trial court
sustained the objection and ordered the response stricken. Defense counsel went on to
establish that the boy’s mother had not called police, either.
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Defendant argues his counsel was deficient because counsel did not argue that the
stricken testimony was admissible, and counsel did not seek to elicit the witness’s
opinion regarding the victim’s character for truthfulness. Regarding the stricken
statement, counsel was not deficient for failing to make a futile argument after the trial
court ruled on the prosecutor’s objection and motion to strike. As for the witness’s
opinion regarding the victim’s character for truthfulness, defendant merely speculates as
to what the witness’s opinion might have been based on the stricken statement; moreover,
defendant does not show how the opinion would have tended to counter the other
evidence corroborating the boy’s account.
Deciding how rigorously a witness should be questioned or cross-examined at trial
is inherently discretionary and rarely implicates constitutional adequacy of
representation. (People v. Bolin (1998) 18 Cal.4th 297, 334.) To prove that it does rise
to that level, a defendant may not simply ask the court to speculate about what might
have been; defendant must indicate what the witness might have said and its likelihood
for exonerating him. (Ibid.) Because he has not done so, defendant’s claim of ineffective
assistance of counsel lacks merit.
IV
Finally, defendant contends the trial court abused its discretion by imposing the
upper term of three years on count one. He claims this is so because the trial court did
not properly credit the victim’s views regarding the appropriate sentence.
Selection of the upper term is justified only when aggravating circumstances
outweigh mitigating circumstances, but a trial court has broad discretion to weigh the
factors. (People v. Lamb (1988) 206 Cal.App.3d 397, 401.) We must affirm unless there
is “a clear showing the sentence choice was arbitrary or irrational.” (Ibid.)
At sentencing, the victim said his contact with defendant was “not a big deal at
all” and defendant “should [not] go to jail,” or at least not for more than three years. The
victim said “everybody needs some type of affection,” defendant “needed some affection
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and I helped him.” Defense counsel requested leniency because defendant had no
criminal record. When given the opportunity to comment, defendant said: “This is all
fabrication, and it’s not justice.”
The trial court acknowledged the victim’s statement, but noted that children “are
not always in the best position to evaluate these situations.” The trial court imposed the
upper term on the count one conviction because the crime was carried out in a manner
that “indicated planning, sophistication and professionalism.”
The statutory prohibition on sexual contact with children was enacted to protect
children from sexual exploitation, in recognition of their relative naiveté and the
profound harm they can suffer when they are “ ‘perceived and used as objects of sexual
desire.’ ” (People v. Soto (2011) 51 Cal.4th 229, 243.) In fact, the Legislature rejected a
proposal that Penal Code section 288, subdivision (c) forbid only nonconsensual touching
of 14 and 15 year olds in favor of a focus on an age gap of 10 years or more because it
recognized that a young person could fall victim to a “more experienced adult.”
(People v. Paz (2000) 80 Cal.App.4th 293, 297.)
Defendant suggests the trial court wholly discounted the victim’s statement in an
arbitrary fashion when it should have counted it as an additional mitigating factor. This,
he contends, was “beyond the bounds of reason and an abuse of discretion.” We
disagree. The trial court acknowledged and commented on the boy’s statement, thanked
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him for it and carefully explained why other considerations were controlling. There was
no abuse of discretion.
DISPOSITION
The judgment is affirmed.
MAURO , Acting P.J.
We concur:
DUARTE , J.
HOCH , J.
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